Subscribe to Permanent Press blog

Pages

Wednesday, May 17, 2017

MAKING IT HAPPEN by Kathleen Novak

Kathleen Novak has written two novels for The Permanent Press The first, Do Not Find Me (February 2016) received wonderful reviews and
excellent sales. Her second, Rare Birds will
be published near the end of June.

Living in Minnesota, we’ve asked her to describe how she
approaches marketing and this is well worth reading. Every author we publish
has written an interesting book, but success depends on having a solid
marketing plan, and Kathleen’s approach is a very successful one. What follows
is her blog, MAKING IT HAPPEN.

∗ ∗ ∗

A bag of tricks is it?

And a game smoothies play?

If you’re good with a
deck of cards or rolling the bones – that helps?

If you can tell jokes
and be a chum

and make an impression
– that helps?

from Honey and Salt by Carl Sandberg

I quote one of my favorite poems to begin the discussion on
promoting our books. It does often seem like a game smoothies play. And I’ll
say that after a year of doing readings and book clubs that telling a joke and
being a chum do help. Everyone wants to laugh, even at a literary reading.
Maybe especially at a literary reading!

I believe that those of us who publish a book in today’s
environment need to face the reality of promoting our own work. To make
something happen we have to augment what the publisher does and take action on
our own behalf. That’s where “the bag of tricks” comes in. I’ve gathered ideas
and advice, observed other authors and added my own discipline to the mix. I
make a plan, give myself deadlines and keep adding to the plan as events evolve. The following list is not the be-all. But it helped me on my debut novel, Do Not Find Me, and I am now doing all
this again for my second novel, Rare
Birds.

Here’s what I suggest:

1.

Schedule a book launch party and invite everyone
you know or think you know. Have something to eat and drink and sell your
books.

2. Use TPP’s preview copies where they will help
you the most. Send them out with a personalized letter to local publications,
media outlets, large and important bookstores, even library systems in your
area.

5.Ask friends, family and other colleagues to host
readings – salons, as one of my friends calls them – either in their homes or
at their neighborhood library.

6.Use social media to announce events and keep
people interested. (I had the idea to pull in music clips and quotes too, but
chickened out on the first novel. Maybe I’ll be more bold this time around.)

7.Go to an inexpensive printer and make business
cards with your book’s cover on one side and your contact info/web address on
the other. I hand these out generously.

Much of this does not come easily for me. I love to write. I
want to be in my corner with papers strewn about, not asking book store owners
to maybe, if you don’t mind, please carry my book. I bombed on at least half of
my outreach. But then I scored on the other half. Some stores carried the book,
newspapers reviewed the book; based on the reviews, I got contacted by
organizations and did events. I was a state book award finalist. I feel like my
efforts worked.

Luck is also an element, of course. That’s where “rolling
the bones” comes in. But by doing all the above, we can certainly deal
ourselves into the game. What helps make something happen? To quote Sandberg,
they all help.

∗ ∗ ∗

Information about Kathleen and her two books can be found on her website, https://www.kathleennovak.com/, and her books can be ordered on Amazon or on our website, thepermanentpress.com. We encourage you to leave your comments on this page, and follow us on Facebook and Twitter! Happy reading (and writing)!